Dr. George M. Nassar, MD, FACP, FASN?
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Dr. George M. Nassar, MD, FACP, FASN, Nephrologist (Kidney Specialist)
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Dr. George M. Nassar, MD, FACP, FASN

Internist

4/5(14)
6560 Fannin St Scurlock Tower Ste 1824 Houston TX, 77030
Rating

4/5

About

Dr. George Nassar is a nephrologist practicing in Houston, TX who specializes in the care and treatment of all aspects of kidney disease. Dr. Nassar has achieved the position of Professor of Clinical Medicine due to his broad expertise in kidney disease management, educational skills, teaching, and research activities. Dr. Nassar treats conditions like chronic kidney disease, acute kidney failure, Polycystic kidney disease, high blood pressure, kidney stones, electrolyte abnormalities, and more. Specifically, Dr. Nassar has extensive experience in management of diabetic kidney disease, kidney disease in the context of heart disease, and fluid overload states. Dr. Nassar has expertise in kidney transplantation, and all types of dialysis modalities. Additionally, Dr. Nassar is Nationally known for his expertise in dialysis vascular access management. Dr. Nassar is well published in peer-reviewed journals. Dr. Nassar is well liked by his patients who find him personable, attentive, caring, effective, and professional.

Education and Training

American University of Beirut Faculty of Medicine in Lebanon Medical Degree 1988

Emory University Internal Medicine Residency 1992

Emory University, Atlanta Nephrology Fellowship 1995

Board Certification

American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM)

Internal MedicineAmerican Board of Internal MedicineABIM- Nephrology

Provider Details

Male English, Arabic
Dr. George M. Nassar, MD, FACP, FASN
Dr. George M. Nassar, MD, FACP, FASN's Expert Contributions
  • Do I have a UTI?

    Yes, I suspect you have a UTI. If you drink a gallon of water, you would go to the bathroom frequently to urinate the water that you drink so that you stay in water balance. This is a good thing in a 20-year-old person. However, if your urinate frequently, but can't hold the urine and the urine is cloudy with odor, then that cannot be explained by drinking lot of water. Hence, it is suspicious for UTI. READ MORE

  • Urinate blood?

    Few drops of blood in isolation in a 28 year old male with no associated symptoms: The main possibilities in 28-year-old male are: 1. Nothing of concern - may be mild trauma 2. Kidney stone that did not cause pain, but injured the tract 3. Urine infection (not likely if no symptoms and 28-year-old male) 4. IgA nephropathy (a condition that affects the kidney filters) Much much less likely in a 28 year old male: Cancer, prostate disease. If this blood in the urine recurs, see a Urologist or a nephrologist or at least your PCP. READ MORE

  • What could a positive test for blood in the urine indicate?

    Depending on your age and sex, the possibilities are many. You should check with your doctor for this problem and would not ignore it. READ MORE

  • Blood in urine?

    You need to be referred to a urologist immediately. READ MORE

  • Bactrim antibiotic?

    If a doctor told you to take Bactrim for a reason, such as possible UTI, go ahead and complete the course that was given to you and continue to communicate with your health care provider(s) if symptoms did not resolve or new symptoms happen. READ MORE

  • I have chronic bladder/urethra pain?

    No easy solutions that you can get, especially if the specialists on her case who are familiar with her case and intervened on her have exhausted their abilities and they know her case well. May be time for a pain specialist to assist, or a second opinion, but has to be a urologist, not a nephrologist. READ MORE

  • Is creatine supplement bad for kidneys?

    Not a good idea. I have seen some issues that were negative. READ MORE

  • What foods should dialysis patients avoid?

    It is not a simple question and can't give you a quick answer. You should talk with the renal dietitian. Every dialysis patient has a renal dietitian who has long standing experience in diet matter related to dialysis. READ MORE

  • Experiencing tightness and heaviness on the left side of my body?

    Best to check with your family doctor to investigate the issue. READ MORE

  • Can a kidney infection get better on its own?

    Possible, if one is young, drinks lot of fluids and has no urinary tract disease, but whether to treat or not treat is going to be a decision between you and your doctor based on your history and risk factors for worsening of the UTI. In general it is best to treat the UTI. In some occasions, a recurrent UTI with no symptoms and keeps coming back after treatment, may be left alone. But the person has to be with a good immune system and has not had a UTI that led to pyelonephritis or bacteria in the blood. READ MORE

  • What is the best procedure to remove kidney stones?

    You have to check with the urologist. The size and location of the stones would dictate what best procedure to do. READ MORE

  • Should I stay off work with a kidney infection?

    No, you should not stay off work when you have a UTI unless you are very sick with fever or have a severe UTI called Pyelonephritis, and you are in the early stages of its treatment. UTI is not contagious so if you don't feel that bad, you should go to work. READ MORE

  • How can I fix kidney injury after COVID?

    We are still in the learning phase of what COVID injury is. It may be different in different people and depends how bad the whole COVID illness was. This is not an easy question to answer not knowing anything else about you. Unlikely to have any medications to fix a COVID kidney injury other than the same meds that you took for the COVID illness (if you did take any). If you have COVID kidney injury, you need to follow with a nephrologist for advice. Time is the best healer in general but there are exceptions and these exceptions depend on what type of COVID kidney injury happened. It is not all the same. You need a kidney specialist to formally evaluate your case and review what happenned. READ MORE

  • How long does it take for antibiotics to work on kidney infection?

    Depends on the severity of the UTI and your age/sex and underlying urological tract disease if any. It would be one day, and could be 3 weeks of treatment depending on the above factors. READ MORE

  • Does a UTI affect your kidneys?

    Usually a simple UTI of the urinary bladder does not affect the kidneys. However Severe UTI that involves the kidney and is called pyelonephritis would affect the kidney. The latter is associated with flank pain, high grade fever and possibly bacteria in the blood. Finally if UTI in children is associated with reflux problems, it could affect the kidney with infection and disease. READ MORE

  • How can I treat kidney injury after COVID?

    Kidney injury from Covid-19 is a relatively new phenomenon and it is not known if there is consensus on what exactly happens in the kidney in COVID-19. Kidney injury in its worst forms is likely to be part of very severe multi-system organ failure from COVID-19, but occasionally isolated kidney injury may occur. However, the kidney injury most of the times means tubular necrosis or interstitial inflammation which most of the time is painless. However, if there is pain over the kidneys, it might be nerve injury or musculoskeletal injury overlying the kidneys. So pain in this case may not be kidney injury. READ MORE

  • Can being dehydrated cause kidney problems?

    Dehydration is not good for the kidneys. If kidney are normal, one can do well by drinking 2.5-3.0 liters of fluid. If there are kidney stones, better to drink 2.5-3.5 liters of fluid. On the other hand, if one has heart disease, kidney disease, liver disease, check with your doctor how much you can drink. There is a condition called SIADH, and in that condition, one may not be able to drink lots of water. READ MORE

  • What leads to sudden and abrupt back pain?

    The few things that cause back pain in a healthy 13-year-old are kidney related, including kidney infection, kidney stones, acute kidney inflammation (uncommon), or urinary reflux. The rest of the causes are muscle, or spine related, or sickle cell disease. There could be other factors that are less common and would need more investigation. READ MORE

  • What causes a bladder infection?

    Multiple causes lead to UTI. Anatomic problems with the bladder and the urinary tract are most important like blockage of the urinary tract, urine retention, pelvic prolapse and incomplete voiding in elderly women, incomplete bladder emptying, immunosuppression, instrumentation by Cystoscopy or having a urinary foley (tube), poor hygiene, and occasionally sexual intercourse (affects women mostly) just to name some. READ MORE

  • Does having diabetes affect kidney function long-term?

    If you are only 16 and have diabetes, yes, diabetes at this age (likely Type 1) has a high chance of affecting your long term kidney function. The best thing to do at this time is to connect with a diabetes doctor, get on an insulin pump (or very aggressive treatment of diabetes), and get your blood sugars under control. The better the diabetes control, the less the injury to the kidney, eyes, nerves and microcirculation in your body. READ MORE

Expert Publications

Data provided by the National Library of Medicine

Areas of expertise and specialization

Chronic Kidney DiseaseAcute Kidney DiseaseHypertensionPolycystic Kidney DiseaseElectrolyte AbnormalitiesKidney TransplantationDialysis Vascular Access ManagementKidney StonesFluid Overload (Edema & Swelling) statesDiabetic Kidney DiseaseLupus kidney Disease

Faculty Titles & Positions

  • Professor of Clinic Medicine Houston Methodist Hospital 2018 - Present
  • Professor of Clinical Medicine Weill Cornell Medicine 2018 -
  • Clinical Educator Texas A&M University 2015 -
  • Key Faculty Nephrology Fellowship Program at Houston Methodist Hospital 2012 -

Awards

  • Compassionate Doctor Recognition (2014, 2015) Year  
  • Patients’ Choice Award (2014, 2016, 2018) Year  
  • On-Time Doctor Award (2014, 2016, 2018) Year  
  • ASDIN (2014, 2019) Year  

Professional Memberships

  • American Society of Nephrology  
  • American Society and Diagnostic and Interventional Nephrology  
  • American College of Physicians  
  • Harris County Medical Society  

Fellowships

  • Emory University School of Medicine Nephrology  1995

Fellowships

  • Emory University School of Medicine (Nephrology Fellowship) (1995)

Professional Society Memberships

  • American College of Physicians, Harris County Medical Society, American Society and Diagnostic and Interventional Nephrology

Philanthropic Initiatives

  • Dr. Nassar has published several manuscripts on various aspects of kidney disease management and dialysis access management. He has also been a national speaker and consultant on hypertension, congestive heart failure, metabolic bone disease, diabetic kidney disease, dialysis vascular access, and anemia treatment in patients with kidney failure.

Areas of research

Dialysis associated bone disease

Dialysis associated hyperkalemia

Dialysis associated hyperphosphatemia

Anemia of Kidney Disease

Dialysis Vascular Access

Diabetic kidney disease

 

Dr. George M. Nassar, MD, FACP, FASN's Practice location

The Kidney Institute

6560 Fannin St Scurlock Tower Ste 1824 -
Houston, TX 77030
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New patients: 713-441-4221

Dr. George M. Nassar, MD, FACP, FASN's reviews

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Patient Experience with Dr. Nassar


4.0

Based on 14 reviews

Dr. George M. Nassar, MD, FACP, FASN has a rating of 4 out of 5 stars based on the reviews from 14 patients. FindaTopDoc has aggregated the experiences from real patients to help give you more insights and information on how to choose the best Internist in your area. These reviews do not reflect a providers level of clinical care, but are a compilation of quality indicators such as bedside manner, wait time, staff friendliness, ease of appointment, and knowledge of conditions and treatments.

Media Releases

Get to know Nephrologist Dr. George M. Nassar, who serves patients in Houston, Texas.

Well liked by his patients who find him personable, attentive, caring, effective, and professional, Dr. Nassar is a nephrologist at The Kidney Institute in Houston, Texas. Collectively, he and his colleagues provide reputable inpatient and outpatient nephrology services in the Texas Medical Center and in North Houston and The Woodlands.

Trained in all aspects of general Internal Medicine and nephrology, Dr. Nassar has 25 years of experience in managing acute and chronic kidney disease, polycystic kidney disease, diabetic kidney disease, electrolyte abnormalities, lupus nephritis, fluid overload states, hypertension, kidney stone disease, dialysis, and kidney transplantation. In addition, he has gained an incredible amount of expertise in interventional aspects of dialysis access management.

Among his academic titles, he is a Professor of Clinical Medicine at the Institute of Academic Medicine at Houston Methodist Hospital (6/2018-present), a Professor of Clinical Medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine (12/2018-present), a Clinical Educator at Texas A&M University (2015-present), and on the key faculty of the Nephrology Fellowship Program at Houston Methodist Hospital (2012-present).

Locally, Dr. Nassar’s main hospital practice is in the Houston Methodist Hospital but he also manages patients in Baylor St. Luke’s Medical Center and Kindred Hospital-Houston Medical Center. His outpatient clinic is in The Kidney Institute located in Scurlock Tower on Fannin Street in the Texas Medical Center. He also has privileges in many Houston based dialysis units.

The doctor’s acclaimed career in medicine began after he earned his medical degree from the American University of Beirut Faculty of Medicine in Lebanon in 1988. He then went on to perform his residency in internal medicine and his fellowship in nephrology at the Emory University School of Medicine in 1992 and 1995, respectively. 

With a commitment to excellence, Dr. Nassar is board-certified in internal medicine and nephrology by the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM). The ABIM is a physician-led, non-profit, independent evaluation organization driven by doctors who want to achieve higher standards for better care in a rapidly changing world. 

Continuously advancing his efforts, he is an active member of the American College of Physicians, the American Society of Nephrology (Fellow), the Harris County Medical Society, and the American Society and Diagnostic and Interventional Nephrology (ASDIN).

With longstanding expertise in multicenter clinical trial research, Dr. Nassar has published several manuscripts on various aspects of kidney disease management and dialysis access management. He has also been a national speaker and consultant on hypertension, congestive heart failure, metabolic bone disease, diabetic kidney disease, dialysis vascular access, and anemia treatment in patients with kidney failure. 

Nephrology is a specialty of medicine and pediatrics that concerns itself with the kidneys. It is the study of normal kidney function and kidney disease, the preservation of kidney health, and the treatment of kidney disease, from diet and medication to renal replacement therapy. Nephrologists have advanced training in treating kidney disease. They diagnose and treat kidney failure, as well as help patients by prescribing medications, offering special diet advice, and coordinating dialysis care or kidney transplantation when it becomes necessary. 

Among his various accolades, Dr. Nassar has been the recipient of Compassionate Doctor Recognition (2014, 2015), Patients’ Choice Award (2014, 2016, 2018), and On-Time Doctor Award (2014, 2016, 2018). He is also the recipient of first abstract awards on his research in dialysis access from the ASDIN (2014, 2019).

On a more personal note, Dr. Nassar speaks fluent English and Arabic. He also manages to speak some Spanish, and tries to learn more Spanish with every Spanish-Speaking patient-encounter. 

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